Nia DaCosta, Olivia Newman, Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre & Yung Chang Move Onto Sundance’s 2015 June Directors & Screenwriters Labs

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In terms of support, they got a taste for what the Sundance Institute had to offer in concretizing aspects of their respective screenplays and in terms of scenery, they’ll need to pack significantly less heavier suitcases. Nia DaCosta (Little Woods), Olivia Newman (First Match), Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre (pictured above) (Mustang) & Yung Chang (Eggplant), Christopher Makoto Yogi (I Was A Simple Man), Mark Kindred (Rogue) and trio Brent Green, Michael McGinley and Thyra Heder‘s untitled project are technically moving onto the next round working on the directing portion of their projects at the June Directors and Screenwriters Labs. they’ll be joined by The Imposter helmer Bart Layton‘s narrative debut, American Animals. The Screenwriters Lab attendees are Dan Krauss‘ docu-to-feature adaptation of The Kill Team, Boots Riley‘s Sorry to Bother You, Frances Bodomo, Mariam Bakacho Khatchvani and Irakli Solomanashvili‘s Afronauts, and finally Fernando Coimbra‘s The Hanged). Here is the press release and projects in more detail:

 

Artists and projects selected for the 2015 Directors Lab (May 25 – June 18) are:

Bart Layton (writer/director) / American Animals (UK): Combining elements of documentary and drama, this existential heist movie is the improbable but entirely true story of a group of well-read university students who plot an escape from middle America by planning the perfect robbery. Along the way reality and fiction become blurred as they attempt to live deeper and deeper inside a movie version of their lives.

Bart Layton is a multi award-winning British director, producer and executive producer. He is the co-principal and creative director of leading British production company, RAW. His first feature documentary film, The Imposter, received great critical acclaim since its debut at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. The film became one of the most successful documentaries of all time and picked up numerous prestigious awards including the Grand Jury Prize at Miami Film Festival, the Golden Eye in Zurich and the Filmmakers’ Award at Hotdocs, before winning two British Independent Film Awards, the BAFTA for best debut director and being shortlisted for the 2013 Academy Awards.

Yung Chang (writer/director) / Eggplant (China/Canada): A neo-noir love story set in China, Eggplant follows a mysterious woman who cons countryside bachelors for their money and a wedding photographer escaping a troubled life in Taiwan. When they meet in a collision of fate, THE PAST quickly confronts the present in an explosion of events as these two Chinese millenials struggle to find a meaningful existence in a society fixated on money, materialism and duty.

Yung Chang, based between China and Canada, is known for his feature documentaries Up the Yangtze (2008), CHINA HEAVYWEIGHT (2012) and THE FRUIT HUNTERS (2013). Both Up the Yangtze and CHINA HEAVYWEIGHT premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and went on to garner numerous awards, including two Taipei Golden Horse Awards. Up the Yangtze had a robust theatrical release in 2008 and CHINA HEAVYWEIGHT had a theatrical release in over 200 mainland China cinemas – a first for a social issue documentary.

Olivia Newman (writer/director) / First Match (U.S.A.): Hardened by years in foster care, a TEENAGE girl from Brooklyn’s Brownsville neighborhood decides that joining the all-boys HIGH SCHOOL wrestling team is the only way back to her estranged father.

Olivia Newman received her MFA in film from Columbia University and has written, directed and produced award-winning short films in the U.S.A., France and Serbia. Her films have screened at dozens of festivals internationally including the New York Film Festival, Aspen Shortsfest and Palm Springs International Shortsfest, and aired nationally on PBS and internationally on ShortsHD. Newman was one of 10 filmmakers selected for the 2012 IFP/Film Society of LINCOLN Center Emerging Visions program and the 2014 Cine Qua Non Screenwriting Lab.

Christopher Makoto Yogi (writer/director) / I Was a Simple Man (U.S.A.): Like marionettes on a stage, the ghosts of an elderly man’s past haunt the countryside in this tale of a Hawai’i family dealing with the death of their patriarch.

Christopher Makoto Yogi was born in Honolulu, Hawai’i and raised on the ocean. His most recent short film, Makoto: or, Honesty is a documentary about the death of his father. His previous film, Obake (Ghosts), screened worldwide including at the Palm Springs International ShortsFest, Raindance Film Festival and the Hawai’i International Film Festival. Yogi also has extensive experience editing documentaries for film and television. He is a graduate of the USC School of Cinematic Arts MFA program and participated in the Visual Communications’ Armed with a Camera fellowship. In addition, Yogi was a fellow in the Kyoto Filmmakers Lab, sponsored by Toei and Shochiku Studios and the Museum of Kyoto.

Nia DaCosta (writer/director) / Little Woods (U.S.A.): For years, Ollie has illicitly helped the struggling fellow residents of her North Dakota oil boomtown access Canadian health care and meds. When the authorities catch on, she plans to abandon her crusade, only to be dragged in even deeper by her foster sister’s desperate plea for help.

Nia DaCosta is a writer/director based in New York City. She has written and directed projects for stage, film and new media platforms including the playlet Kingdom Come at the Leicester Square Theatre in London, the game show Sagmeister v Walsh for Adobe (Behance), and the documentary Shark Loves the Amazon.

Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre (writer/director) / Mustang (France): Roman Coleman is halfway through an 11-year sentence for attempted murder when he is offered the chance to participate in a rehabilitation program that trains inmates to break captured wild mustangs. Based on a real-life program, Mustang is a portrait of one man’s unique connection to these wild animals and his complex struggle to control his own ferocity.

Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre is a French actress, producer and director living in Paris. She has worked as an actress with directors including Raoul Ruiz, Luc Besson, Julian Schnabel, Pascal Thomas, Jean Michel Ribes, Danielle Thompson and Rani Massalha. Her first short film as a writer/director, Atlantic Avenue, won prizes at the Nantucket Film Festival, Milwaukee Film Festival, and the Tenerife International Film Festival, and also screened at the Tribeca Film Festival, Clermont Ferrand and the Palm Springs International Film Festival, among others. Her second short film, Rabbit, which was bought by Canal Plus and produced by Charles Gillibert of CG CINEMA in coproduction with the company MACT PRODUCTION, premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. Laure has been named a Sundance Institute/RT Features Fellow.

Mark Kindred (writer/director) / Rogue (U.S.A.): An ex-cop GONE rogue wages unconventional warfare on the institutional forces that wronged him. Inspired by true events.

Mark F. Kindred grew up as an immigrant in the projects of Boston. He earned his bachelor degree in philosophy at Harvard University and has lived and traveled all over the world. He is currently a graduate thesis student at the NYU Tisch School of the Arts, where he is the recipient of the Williard T.C. Johnson Fellowship and the 2014 Faculty Commendation Award. His short film America premiered at the SXSW Film Festival.

Brent Green (co-writer/director), Michael McGinley (co-writer) and Thyra Heder (co-writer) / Untitled Loveless Fable (U.S.A.): In this stop-motion animated film, a young boy begins inventing strange, hand-made machines to ease his mother’s hard labor and bring joy to her monotonous life, but his ambitions quickly grow. When his most daring invention backfires and changes life on Earth forever, his NEIGHBORS struggle to understand whether he has done them harm or shown them what they have been missing.

Working in the hills of rural Pennsylvania, Brent Green is a self-taught filmmaker, storyteller and visual artist whose films have screened, often with live musical accompaniment, at the Rotterdam Film Festival, the Sundance Film Festival, the San Francisco Film Society, MoMA, The J. Paul Getty Museum, The Walker Art Center, The Hammer Museum, as well as at warehouses, galleries and rooftops across the globe. He serves on the board of Rooftop Films, is a 2005 Creative Capital grantee, and is the recipient of 2014 MAPfund grant. Green’s work is in permanent collections including the Progressive Collection, the Hammer Museum and MoMA. He is currently in the midst of a year-long residency at the Park Avenue Armory.

Thyra Heder is an author, illustrator and artist who got her start studying film. She graduated from Brown University with a BA in Art Semiotics and put it to surprising good use storyboarding for television, feature films and advertising campaigns. Over the last decade her clients have expanded to include major restaurant groups, design companies and hotels, and her work has been regularly featured in Vogue. Her debut picture book, Fraidyzoo, garnered numerous starred reviews and was one of the ALSC Notable Children’s Books of 2014. Her second book, The Bear Report, will be released this fall.

Michael McGinley is a musician and painter from Chicago. He has performed with members of Fugazi, Dirty Three and Califone. His work has been featured in the Chicago Reader, Doris and Dead or Dying.

Artists and projects joining the Directors Lab Fellows for the 2015 June Screenwriters Lab (June 20-25), which will be dedicated to the memory of longtime Creative Advisor and award-winning screenwriter Stewart Stern, are:

Frances Bodomo (writer/director) / Afronauts (Zambia/U.S.A.): Just after Zambian Independence in 1964, an ingenious group of villagers builds a homemade rocket in a wild bid to join the Space Race. As the launch date approaches, their astronaut-17-year-old albino Matha Mwambwa-must decide if getting into their precarious rocket vindicates her traumatic past or just makes her a glorified human sacrifice. Inspired by true events.

Frances Bodomo grew up in Ghana, Norway, and Hong Kong before moving to New York City to study film at Columbia University (BA) and NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts (MFA). Her two short films, Boneshaker (2013) and Afronauts (2014), both premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and went on to play at film festivals including the Berlinale, Telluride, and SXSW. Afronauts received the Grand Jury Prize for Short Film at Dallas International Film Festival, IFFBoston, BlackStar Film Festival, and New Orleans Film Festival. Bodomo has been named a Sundance Institute/Alfred P. Sloan Fellow.

Mariam Bakacho Khatchvani (co-writer/director), Vladimer Katcharava (co-writer/producer) and Irakli Solomanashvili (co-writer) / Dede (Georgia): As Georgia fights for its independence after the collapse of the Soviet Union, a young woman struggles to make a life in the remote, ISOLATED villages high in the Caucusus Mountains, where ancient patriarchal laws threaten to separate her from her daughter.

Born in Ushguli, Georgia, Mariam Bakacho Khatchvani directed the short film Dinola, which was nominated for a European Film Award and screened at several international film festivals including Clermont-Ferrand and Hong Kong. Dede will be her feature debut.

Vladimer Katcharava was born in Tbilisi, Georgia. He recently was a producer on the feature President, directed by Mohsen Makhmalbaf, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival in 2014 and went on to screen at a myriad of international film festivals.

Irakli Solomanashvili is a Georgian writer known for the films Bolo Gaseirneba, The Conflict Zone, and Gaseirneba Karabaghshi.

Fernando Coimbra (writer/director) / The Hanged (Brazil): A family dispute upsets the ruling order in Rio de Janeiro’s underworld, triggering a bloody escalation of betrayals and double crosses. Set in the unique world of traditional Brazilian gambling syndicates, The Hanged is a dark comedic tale of greed and trust which illuminates THE MOMENT at which even the closest relationships can’t survive.

Fernando Coimbra majored in Cinema at the University of São Paulo (ECA-USP). He has written and directed nine short films, including Tropic of Goats (2007) and Magnificent Desolation (2010). His first feature, A Wolf at the Door, premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2013. The film won the Horizons Award at the San Sebastian International Film Festival and won awards at many other international film festivals including Havana, Miami, Guadalajara, Marseille and Rio de Janeiro.

Dan Krauss (writer/director) / THE KILL TEAM (U.S.A.): Based on the true story of an American soldier forced to choose between his conscience and his survival when members of his platoon carry out a scheme to murder Afghan civilians.

Dan Krauss is an Academy Award-nominated documentary director. His most recent feature documentary, The Kill Team, won the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the Tribeca Film Festival, the Truer than Fiction Independent Spirit Award, and a nomination from the Director’s Guild of America. Krauss earned his Master’s Degree from UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of Journalism, where he is presently a lecturer in documentary film and television production.

Boots Riley (writer/director) / Sorry to Bother You (U.S.A.): A black telemarketer with self-esteem issues discovers a magical key to business success, propelling him to the upper echelons of the hierarchy just as his activist comrades are rising up against unjust labor practices. When he uncovers the macabre secret of his corporate overlords, he must decide whether to stand up or sell out.

Boots Riley studied film at San Francisco State University before ending his studies in favor of a major label recording deal for his band, The Coup. He directed a music video for The Coup’s “Me And Jesus The Pimp In A ’79 Granada Last Night,” upon which the novel Too Beautiful For Words was based. He has never won an award for artistic achievement, but has decided that being the only musical artist whose surveillance was uncovered via Wikileaks is just as good as an Oscar or a Grammy.

The Sundance Institute Feature Film Program is supported by The Annenberg Foundation; Alfred P. Sloan Foundation; RT Features; Red Crown Productions; Time Warner Foundation; HP; AJ+; Jeanne Donovan Fisher; Hollywood Foreign Press Association; National Endowment for the Arts; NHK Enterprises, Inc.; Manish Mundra; 3311 Productions; The Ammon Foundation; Firestone / von Winterfeldt Family Fund; A3 Foundation; the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation; SAGIndie; Grazka Taylor; The Ray and Dagmar Dolby Family Fund; Naja Pham Lockwood and David Lockwood; and The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

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Eric Lavallée
Eric Lavalléehttps://www.ericlavallee.com
Eric Lavallée is the founder, CEO, editor-in-chief, film journalist, and critic at IONCINEMA.com, established in 2000. A regular at Sundance, Cannes, and Venice, Eric holds a BFA in film studies from the Mel Hoppenheim School of Cinema. In 2013, he served on the narrative competition jury at the SXSW Film Festival. He was an associate producer on Mark Jackson’s "This Teacher" (2018 LA Film Festival, 2018 BFI London). In 2022, he was a New Flesh Juror for Best First Feature at the Fantasia International Film Festival. His top films for 2023 include The Zone of Interest (Glazer), Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell (Pham Thien An), Totem (Lila Avilés), La Chimera (Alice Rohrwacher), All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt (Raven Jackson). He is a Golden Globes Voter.

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